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Query: UMLS:C0022568 (keratitis)
5,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Staphylococcus aureus infection of the cornea is a significant threat to vision. The percentage of bacterial isolates resistant to antibiotics is increasing as is the percentage of infections caused by methicillin resistant isolates. There is a critical need for additional therapeutic approaches and their development will require the use of animal models to test efficacy. Two mouse models of S. aureus keratitis have been described but only quantified stromal keratitis (corneal clouding and perforation). We have extended these models using the methicillin resistant S. aureus USA300 LAC strain and show that eyelid inflammation and swelling (blepharitis) and corneal neovascularization can be quantified. This expanded model should prove useful in assessing additional effects of antibacterial therapies and additional pathological mechanisms involved in bacterial ocular infection.
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PMID:A Mouse Model of Multi-Drug Resistant Staphylococcus aureus-induced Ocular Disease. 2789 97

The diagnosis of keratitis is based on visual exam, tissue cytology, and standard microbial culturing to determine the type of the infectious pathogen. To prescribe appropriate therapy, it is important to distinguish between bacterial, fungal, and viral keratitis, as the treatments are quite different. Diagnosis of the causative organism has a substantial prognostic importance. Further, timely knowledge of the nature of the pathogen is also critical to adapt therapy in patients unresponsive to empiric treatment options, which occurs in 10% of all cases. Currently, the identification of the nature of the pathogen that causes keratitis is achieved via microbial culture screening, which is laboratory-based, expensive, and time-consuming. The most frequent pathogens that cause the corneal ulcers are P. aeruginosa and S. aureus. Here, we report a microchip for rapid (<1h) detection of P. aeruginosa (6294), S. aureus(LAC), through on-chip electrical sensing of bacterial lysate. We evaluated the microchip with spiked samples of PBS with bacteria concentration between 101 to 108 CFU/mL. The least diluted bacteria concentration in bacteria-spiked samples with statistically significant impedance change was 10 CFU/mL. We further validated our assay by comparing our microchip results with the standard culture-based methods using eye washes obtained from 13 infected mice.
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PMID:Label-free electrical sensing of bacteria in eye wash samples: A step towards point-of-care detection of pathogens in patients with infectious keratitis. 2798 8